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Dive into the research topics where Ian J. Holt is active.

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Featured researches published by Ian J. Holt.


Molecular Cell | 2013

PrimPol, an Archaic Primase/Polymerase Operating in Human Cells

Sara García-Gómez; Aurelio Reyes; María I. Martínez-Jiménez; E. Sandra Chocrón; Silvana Mourón; Gloria Terrados; Christopher A. Powell; Eduardo Salido; Juan Méndez; Ian J. Holt; Luis Blanco

Summary We describe a second primase in human cells, PrimPol, which has the ability to start DNA chains with deoxynucleotides unlike regular primases, which use exclusively ribonucleotides. Moreover, PrimPol is also a DNA polymerase tailored to bypass the most common oxidative lesions in DNA, such as abasic sites and 8-oxoguanine. Subcellular fractionation and immunodetection studies indicated that PrimPol is present in both nuclear and mitochondrial DNA compartments. PrimPol activity is detectable in mitochondrial lysates from human and mouse cells but is absent from mitochondria derived from PRIMPOL knockout mice. PRIMPOL gene silencing or ablation in human and mouse cells impaired mitochondrial DNA replication. On the basis of the synergy observed with replicative DNA polymerases Polγ and Polε, PrimPol is proposed to facilitate replication fork progression by acting as a translesion DNA polymerase or as a specific DNA primase reinitiating downstream of lesions that block synthesis during both mitochondrial and nuclear DNA replication.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2011

TEFM (c17orf42) is necessary for transcription of human mtDNA

Michal Minczuk; Jiuya He; Anna M. Duch; Thijs J. G. Ettema; Aleksander Chlebowski; Karol Dzionek; Leo Nijtmans; Martijn A. Huynen; Ian J. Holt

Here we show that c17orf42, hereafter TEFM (transcription elongation factor of mitochondria), makes a critical contribution to mitochondrial transcription. Inactivation of TEFM in cells by RNA interference results in respiratory incompetence owing to decreased levels of H- and L-strand promoter-distal mitochondrial transcripts. Affinity purification of TEFM from human mitochondria yielded a complex comprising mitochondrial transcripts, mitochondrial RNA polymerase (POLRMT), pentatricopeptide repeat domain 3 protein (PTCD3), and a putative DEAD-box RNA helicase, DHX30. After RNase treatment only POLRMT remained associated with TEFM, and in human cultured cells TEFM formed foci coincident with newly synthesized mitochondrial RNA. Based on deletion mutants, TEFM interacts with the catalytic region of POLRMT, and in vitro TEFM enhanced POLRMT processivity on ss- and dsDNA templates. TEFM contains two HhH motifs and a Ribonuclease H fold, similar to the nuclear transcription elongation regulator Spt6. These findings lead us to propose that TEFM is a mitochondrial transcription elongation factor.


FEBS Letters | 2005

Wobble modification deficiency in mutant tRNAs in patients with mitochondrial diseases

Takehiro Yasukawa; Yohei Kirino; Norie Ishii; Ian J. Holt; Howard T. Jacobs; Takao Makifuchi; Nobuyoshi Fukuhara; Shigeo Ohta; Tsutomu Suzuki; Kimitsuna Watanabe

Point mutations in mitochondrial (mt) tRNA genes are associated with a variety of human mitochondrial diseases. We have shown previously that mt tRNALeu(UUR) with a MELAS A3243G mutation and mt tRNALys with a MERRF A8344G mutation derived from HeLa background cybrid cells are deficient in normal taurine‐containing modifications [τm5(s2)U; 5‐taurinomethyl‐(2‐thio)uridine] at the anticodon wobble position in both cases. The wobble modification deficiency results in defective translation. We report here wobble modification deficiencies of mutant mt tRNAs from cybrid cells with different nuclear backgrounds, as well as from patient tissues. These findings demonstrate the generality of the wobble modification deficiency in mutant tRNAs in MELAS and MERRF.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2013

Mitochondrial DNA replication proceeds via a ‘bootlace’ mechanism involving the incorporation of processed transcripts

Aurelio Reyes; Lawrence Kazak; Stuart R Wood; Takehiro Yasukawa; Howard T. Jacobs; Ian J. Holt

The observation that long tracts of RNA are associated with replicating molecules of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) suggests that the mitochondrial genome of mammals is copied by an unorthodox mechanism. Here we show that these RNA-containing species are present in living cells and tissue, based on interstrand cross-linking. Using DNA synthesis in organello, we demonstrate that isolated mitochondria incorporate radiolabeled RNA precursors, as well as DNA precursors, into replicating DNA molecules. RNA-containing replication intermediates are chased into mature mtDNA, to which they are thus in precursor–product relationship. While a DNA chain terminator rapidly blocks the labeling of mitochondrial replication intermediates, an RNA chain terminator does not. Furthermore, processed L-strand transcripts can be recovered from gel-extracted mtDNA replication intermediates. Therefore, instead of concurrent DNA and RNA synthesis, respectively, on the leading and lagging strands, preformed processed RNA is incorporated as a provisional lagging strand during mtDNA replication. These findings indicate that RITOLS is a physiological mechanism of mtDNA replication, and that it involves a ‘bootlace mechanism, in which processed transcripts are successively hybridized to the lagging-strand template, as the replication fork advances.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Primer retention owing to the absence of RNase H1 is catastrophic for mitochondrial DNA replication

J. Bradley Holmes; Gokhan Akman; Stuart R Wood; Kiran Sakhuja; Susana M. Cerritelli; Chloe Moss; Mark Bowmaker; Howard T. Jacobs; Robert J. Crouch; Ian J. Holt

Significance Cellular energy production is a function of the abundance of the small circular DNA molecules in mitochondria. Mitochondrial DNA is replicated in both dividing and nondividing cells, and encoding ribonuclease H1 (RNase H1) is essential to this process. Here, we define its mechanistic role: the removal of the RNA primers used for mitochondrial DNA replication. In the absence of RNase H1, primers are fixed in both template strands of mitochondrial DNA. The retained primers are a major impediment to mitochondrial DNA polymerase γ, leading to the formation of persistent DNA gaps that are catastrophic for subsequent rounds of replication. Moreover, primer retention provides unambiguous identification of RNA-DNA transition sites in the control region of mitochondrial DNA, thereby defining two major origins of replication. Encoding ribonuclease H1 (RNase H1) degrades RNA hybridized to DNA, and its function is essential for mitochondrial DNA maintenance in the developing mouse. Here we define the role of RNase H1 in mitochondrial DNA replication. Analysis of replicating mitochondrial DNA in embryonic fibroblasts lacking RNase H1 reveals retention of three primers in the major noncoding region (NCR) and one at the prominent lagging-strand initiation site termed Ori-L. Primer retention does not lead immediately to depletion, as the persistent RNA is fully incorporated in mitochondrial DNA. However, the retained primers present an obstacle to the mitochondrial DNA polymerase γ in subsequent rounds of replication and lead to the catastrophic generation of a double-strand break at the origin when the resulting gapped molecules are copied. Hence, the essential role of RNase H1 in mitochondrial DNA replication is the removal of primers at the origin of replication.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2014

MPV17L2 is required for ribosome assembly in mitochondria

Ilaria Dalla Rosa; Romina Durigon; Sarah F. Pearce; Joanna Rorbach; Elizabeth M. A. Hirst; Sara Vidoni; Aurelio Reyes; Gloria Brea-Calvo; Michal Minczuk; Michael W. Woellhaf; Johannes M. Herrmann; Martijn A. Huynen; Ian J. Holt; Antonella Spinazzola

MPV17 is a mitochondrial protein of unknown function, and mutations in MPV17 are associated with mitochondrial deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) maintenance disorders. Here we investigated its most similar relative, MPV17L2, which is also annotated as a mitochondrial protein. Mitochondrial fractionation analyses demonstrate MPV17L2 is an integral inner membrane protein, like MPV17. However, unlike MPV17, MPV17L2 is dependent on mitochondrial DNA, as it is absent from ρ0 cells, and co-sediments on sucrose gradients with the large subunit of the mitochondrial ribosome and the monosome. Gene silencing of MPV17L2 results in marked decreases in the monosome and both subunits of the mitochondrial ribosome, leading to impaired protein synthesis in the mitochondria. Depletion of MPV17L2 also induces mitochondrial DNA aggregation. The DNA and ribosome phenotypes are linked, as in the absence of MPV17L2 proteins of the small subunit of the mitochondrial ribosome are trapped in the enlarged nucleoids, in contrast to a component of the large subunit. These findings suggest MPV17L2 contributes to the biogenesis of the mitochondrial ribosome, uniting the two subunits to create the translationally competent monosome, and provide evidence that assembly of the small subunit of the mitochondrial ribosome occurs at the nucleoid.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Amino acid starvation has opposite effects on mitochondrial and cytosolic protein synthesis.

Mark A. Johnson; Sara Vidoni; Romina Durigon; Sarah F. Pearce; Joanna Rorbach; Jiuya He; Gloria Brea-Calvo; Michal Minczuk; Aurelio Reyes; Ian J. Holt; Antonella Spinazzola

Amino acids are essential for cell growth and proliferation for they can serve as precursors of protein synthesis, be remodelled for nucleotide and fat biosynthesis, or be burnt as fuel. Mitochondria are energy producing organelles that additionally play a central role in amino acid homeostasis. One might expect mitochondrial metabolism to be geared towards the production and preservation of amino acids when cells are deprived of an exogenous supply. On the contrary, we find that human cells respond to amino acid starvation by upregulating the amino acid-consuming processes of respiration, protein synthesis, and amino acid catabolism in the mitochondria. The increased utilization of these nutrients in the organelle is not driven primarily by energy demand, as it occurs when glucose is plentiful. Instead it is proposed that the changes in the mitochondrial metabolism complement the repression of cytosolic protein synthesis to restrict cell growth and proliferation when amino acids are limiting. Therefore, stimulating mitochondrial function might offer a means of inhibiting nutrient-demanding anabolism that drives cellular proliferation.


BioEssays | 2014

Unique features of DNA replication in mitochondria: a functional and evolutionary perspective.

Ian J. Holt; Howard T. Jacobs

Last year, we reported a new mechanism of DNA replication in mammals. It occurs inside mitochondria and entails the use of processed transcripts, termed bootlaces, which hybridize with the displaced parental strand as the replication fork advances. Here we discuss possible reasons why such an unusual mechanism of DNA replication might have evolved. The bootlace mechanism can minimize the occurrence and impact of single‐strand breaks that would otherwise threaten genome stability. Furthermore, by providing an implicit mismatch recognition system, it should limit the occurrence of replication‐dependent deletions and insertions, and defend against invading elements. Such a mechanism may also limit attempts to manipulate the mammalian mitochondrial genome.


PLOS ONE | 2013

A Cryptic Targeting Signal Creates a Mitochondrial FEN1 Isoform with Tailed R-Loop Binding Properties

Lawrence Kazak; Aurelio Reyes; Jiuya He; Stuart R Wood; Gloria Brea-Calvo; Torgeir T Holen; Ian J. Holt

A growing number of DNA transacting proteins is found in the nucleus and in mitochondria, including the DNA repair and replication protein Flap endonuclease 1, FEN1. Here we show a truncated FEN1 isoform is generated by alternative translation initiation, exposing a mitochondrial targeting signal. The shortened form of FEN1, which we term FENMIT, localizes to mitochondria, based on import into isolated organelles, immunocytochemistry and subcellular fractionation. In vitro FENMIT binds to flap structures containing a 5′ RNA flap, and prefers such substrates to single-stranded RNA. FENMIT can also bind to R-loops, and to a lesser extent to D-loops. Exposing human cells to ethidium bromide results in the generation of RNA/DNA hybrids near the origin of mitochondrial DNA replication. FENMIT is recruited to the DNA under these conditions, and is released by RNase treatment. Moreover, high levels of recombinant FENMIT expression inhibit mtDNA replication, following ethidium bromide treatment. These findings suggest FENMIT interacts with RNA/DNA hybrids in mitochondrial DNA, such as those found at the origin of replication.


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B | 2014

The road to rack and ruin: selecting deleterious mitochondrial DNA variants

Ian J. Holt; Dave Speijer; Thomas B. L. Kirkwood

Mitochondria constitute the major energy-producing compartment of the eukaryotic cell. These organelles contain many molecules of DNA that contribute only a handful of proteins required for energy production. Mutations in the DNA of mitochondria were identified as a cause of human disease a quarter of a century ago, and they have subsequently been implicated in ageing. The process whereby deleterious variants come to dominate a cell, tissue or human is the subject of debate. It is likely to involve multiple, often competing, factors, as selection pressures on mitochondrial DNA can be both indirect and intermittent, and are subjected to rapid change. Here, we assess the different models and the prospects for preventing the accumulation of deleterious mitochondrial DNA variants with time.

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Aurelio Reyes

MRC Mitochondrial Biology Unit

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Stuart R Wood

MRC Mitochondrial Biology Unit

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Gloria Brea-Calvo

MRC Mitochondrial Biology Unit

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Jiuya He

Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre

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Joanna Rorbach

MRC Mitochondrial Biology Unit

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Lawrence Kazak

MRC Mitochondrial Biology Unit

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Michal Minczuk

Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre

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Sara Vidoni

MRC Mitochondrial Biology Unit

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